Episodes

  • To the Ends of the Earth
    May 20 2024

    In To the Ends of the Earth: A Grand Tour for the 21st Century, Richard Weller, Professor Emeritus and Co-Founder of the Ian L. McHarg Center for Urbanism & Ecology at the University of Pennsylvania, has condensed a sprawling subject into a compact field guide to 120 of the most significant 21st century objects, from bulldozers to Biosphere II. Call it dystopian, call it optimistic. Just don’t call it “anthroporn.”

    --

    Intro/Outro: “Until the End of the World,” by U2

    --

    Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology After the End of the World, by Timothy Morton

    Utopias (and Utopia’s Evil Twins)

    Welwyn Garden City

    Chandigarh

    Burning Man

    EPCOT

    Pruitt-Igoe

    Walmart Supercenter

    Machines:

    Bulldozers + polymetric nodules

    Fish farms

    Solar arrays

    Sand motor + littoral drift

    Tree-planting drones

    Monsters:

    Geo-engineering

    The World Park Project / UN Convention on Biological Diversity

    Y2Y

    Banff Wildlife Crossings Project

    The Atlas for the End of the World

    Show More Show Less
    42 mins
  • Cities in the Sky
    May 11 2024

    Jason Barr is a professor of economics at Rutgers University Newark and one of the world's foremost experts on the economics of skyscrapers. His new book, out May 14, 2024, is Cities in the Sky: The Quest to Build the World’s Tallest Skyscrapers. In it, Barr takes a global view of why the quest to build up is as fierce as ever, and why skyscrapers remain so controversial. Join the Unfrozen interview with Barr, in which some record-breaking myths get busted.

    --

    Intro/Outro: “Altitude Blues,” by Ladytron

    --

    Discussed:

    Mythbusting the Home Insurance Building

    First Skyscrapers | Skyscraper Firsts Forum

    LeRoy Buffington’s skyscraper patent

    Mythbusting The Skyscraper Index

    The Line

    Jeddah Tower

    Joel Garreau’s Edge City

    Emaar’s real estate play at Burj Khalifa: Downtown Dubai

    Legends Tower, Oklahoma City

    Empire State Building

    China’s “build it” economy

    “Zero Gravity Living”

    Nashville and Oracle

    Detroit and Dan Gilbert

    Newark renaissance

    Center City District (Philadelphia) study: Downtowns Rebound

    Karen Seto (Yale)'s studies on tall building height canopies

    Show More Show Less
    43 mins
  • Irreplaceable
    Apr 21 2024

    Kevin Kelley, a self-described “attention architect,” is a co-founding partner of design firm Shook Kelley and author of Irreplaceable: How to Create Extraordinary Places That Bring People Together. In our digitized world of ghost commerce, he believes there is still a place for real places, and that it is incumbent on architects to stop looking down their noses at retail, the essential lubricant of urban life, and start designing places that matter.

    --

    Intro/Outro: “Friction,” by Television

    --

    Discussed:

    Bass Pro Shops at the Memphis Pyramid

    Against 15-Minute Delivery

    “The Bonfire Effect,” courtesy Loxahatchie, Florida

    Participation mystique, as per Jung, as per Lucien Levy-Bruhl

    “TheAnxious Generation” by Jonathan Haidt

    “Harvard Guide to Shopping” by Rem Koolhaas et. al.

    Prior Unfrozen commentary on the replacement for the Orange County Government Center by Paul Rudolph

    Robert Venturi on Las Vegas

    Maslow's hierarchy of needs

    Yaromir Steiner and Easton Town Center, Columbus

    Victor Gruen

    Country Club Plaza, Kansas City

    The Grove, Los Angeles

    The Farmer’s Market, Los Angeles

    Larchmont, Los Angeles

    Hollywood and Highland (now Ovation), Los Angeles

    Harley-Davidson dealerships’ Parts Bar

    Mercado Gonzalez, Costa Mesa, CA

    Show More Show Less
    53 mins
  • From Railyards to High-Rises
    Apr 13 2024

    Craig Hutson has worked in research and development in academia and industry and is fascinated with the history of Chicago’s lakefront. When seeking a definitive book about the history of Illinois Center and Lakeshore East, the air-rights developments above former docklands and railyards east of the Loop, he realized there wasn’t one, and he decided to write it himself.

    --

    --

    Intro/Outro: “Nighttime in the Switching Yard,” by Warren Zevon

    --

    Discussed:

    Illinois Central Railroad

    Illinois Center

    Lakeshore East

    Millennium Park

    Maggie Daley Park

    Aqua

    St. Regis Chicago

    Outer Drive East (400 East Randolph)

    Blue Cross Blue Shield Tower

    The Park at Lakeshore East

    Millennium Station

    Hyatt Regency Chicago

    Chicago Pedway

    Boulevard East

    Magellan Development Group

    James Loewenberg

    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • Horror in Architecture
    Mar 23 2024
    Blobs. Doppelgangers. Giants. Puppets. Incontinent objects. Mullets. Army of Darkness. All and much more are covered in Horror in Architecture: The Reanimated Edition by Joshua Comaroff and Ong Ker-Shing. The book examines how horror genre tropes familiar from books and cinema also appear in architecture, and in so doing, how we can find another way to understand and criticize our built environment, using the language of mass culture in place of “weaponized jargon.” Comaroff is the guest of honor on episode 76 of Unfrozen. -- -- Intro/Outro: “Scare Me,” by Deadbolt -- Discussed: Immanuel Kant Edmund Burke Harvard Graduate School of Design under Rem Koolhaas Bigness, or the Problem of Large, by Rem Koolhaas Centre Pompidou = Terry Gilliam’s Brazil Xintiandi, Shanghai Jan Gehl The Architectural Uncanny, by Anthony Vidler Built Beautiful, with narration by … Martha Stewart Mullets Army of Darkness Twins are in Doppelgangers Ordos 100, Inner Mongolia - House House, by Johnston Marklee - Gaston Bachelard - Preston Scott Cohen - Ai Weiwei H.R. Giger -> Zaha Hadid -> Thomas Heatherwick-> Santiago Calatrava Zeitz MOCAA, Cape Town Gordon Matta-Clark Jan Kaplicky / Future Systems Frank Gehry Francois Roche Parc de la Villette American Psycho Hannover Pavilion at Expo 2000 by MVRDV = Arby’s Breakfast Sandwich Toshiko Mori Caltrans Building, Los Angeles, Morphosis Daniel Libeskind League of Extraordinary Gentlemen series, by Alan Moore House of Leaves, by Mark Danielewski The Master and Margarita, by Mikhail Bulgakov Saddam Hussein’s Frank Frazetta-esque fantasy interior paintings Idi Amin’s Chinese Garden Great Basilica, Yamoussukro, Ivory Coast (110% the size of St. Peters) Anti-Oedipus, by Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari The Day of the Beast and Philip Johnson’s Gate of Europe, Madrid
    Show More Show Less
    45 mins
  • We're Back, Miss Us?
    Mar 10 2024
    Never mind the weather, don’t you feel it has been a cold and eerily quiet winter? Could it be because Unfrozen was offline due to unanticipated legal issues with our podcasting platform? Never fear, we are back in black / in the saddle again, we missed you, and we are ready to infiltrate your ears with our musings once again. Intro/Outro: “Miss You,” by the Rolling Stones -- Discussed: - Spotify throws a sprocket in our jam-bulance wheels - Ubik-like terms of service, as written by Philip K. Dick. - Digital Millennium Copyright Act - Dubai: Mistakes were made - 15-minute cities are in the Dubai 2040 plan - Junkspace - Diriyah Gate - Qiddiya - North Pole Riyadh, 2-kilometer tower by Foster + Partners - The Ministry of McKinsey - The US Senate Inquiry into the PIF Consultants - Dubai Creek Harbour and the delayed Dubai Creek Tower maybe restarting? - Jeddah Tower also maybe restarting? - Pritzker Prize goes to Riken Yamamoto o Work includes The Circle, Zurich Airport - Bjarke Ingels had a big, postmodern, postironic week o Museum/Casino of Freedom and Democracy, New York o Las Vegas A’s Stadium - Exhuming Baudrillard - Bears and Sox lobbying Chicago and Illinois for stadium subsidies - F1 < Saudi Vegas > F1 - Saudi 2034 World Cup Stadium by Populous - Greg’s SXSW calendar o Conference of Mayors Civic I/O Mayor’s Summit o Using Augmented Reality to Drive Inclusive City Development - Also at SXSW: Imagine Harder: Prototyping Impossible Futures - Don’t drive or walk outside using Apple Vision Pro goggles - Upcoming guests: o Joshua Comaroff & Ong Ker-Shing, authors of Horror in Architecture o Kevin Kelley, Shook Kelley, author of Irreplaceable (not Kevin Kelly)
    Show More Show Less
    30 mins
  • Domo Arigatou, "Mike 2.0"
    Jan 29 2024

    In every office, there is someone with so much accumulated knowledge the boss wants to “clone” them. At structural engineering firm Thornton Tomasetti (TT), they’ve basically done that. The firm has taken the concept of a “digital twin” to a newly literal level – engineers can now quiz a synthetic clone of the firm’s in-house welding and metallurgy expert, constructed from 30 years of his files and emails. Chief Technology Officer Robert Otani tells Unfrozen where TT is taking generative artificial intelligence (GAI) next.

    --

    Intro/Outro: “Mr. Roboto,” by Styx

    --

    Discussed:

    ·     ZHA’s Patrik Schumacher keynote at the AIA Center for Architecture’s AI+A Symposium, 16 December 2023

    ·     Dall-E, ChatGPT, Midjourney, OpenAI

    ·     HOU 3000: Serpentine Galleries’ virtual chief curator, Hans Ulrich Obrist

    ·     TT’s Spark Intranet

    ·     Cornell Tech Jacobs Institute: The Future of Generative AI in Architecture, Design and Engineering

    ·     TT made a digital twin of welding and metallurgy expert Mike DeLashmit. The real Mike gives "Mike 2.0" a “4.7 out of 5” in terms of the accuracy of its answers.

    ·     Converting scanned PDF drawings with annotations into vectors + tabular data

    ·     Google Gemini

    ·     A “hallucination throttle” for generative AI iterations on existing documents

    ·     Using AI to optimize material quantities, operational energy, and eventually, embodied carbon

    Show More Show Less
    43 mins
  • On Balance: Architecture and Vertigo
    Jan 22 2024

    Mankind’s quest for verticality has an underexplored dimension: the queasy feeling of vertigo many experience when close to the edge of a sheer drop. Davide Deriu, Reader in Architectural History and Theory at the University of Westminster, London, has taken on the relative lack of research into the subject with an interdisciplinary approach, captured in his book On Balance: Architecture and Vertigo. Come, stand on the edge with us.

    --

    Intro/Outro: “Vertigo” by U2

    --

    Discussed:

               Vertigo, Alfred Hitchcock, 1958

             Vertical: The City from Satellites to Bunkers, Stephen Graham, 2016

             Vertigo in the City program at University of Westminster, 2015

           The Eiffel Tower and Other Mythologies, Roland Barthes, 1979

             Funambulism

                 Jean François "Blondin" Gravelet – Niagara Falls wire walk, 1859

           Philippe Petit, World Trade Center wire walk, 1974

                 Jan Gehl on humans’ “natural” habitat in horizontal planes

               Singapore’s HDB social high-rises

                Mies’ insertion of ventilation grilles in front of the glass curtain wall at the Seagram Building, 1958

              Prosper Meniere, father of the vestibular sciences

    Show More Show Less
    40 mins